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How can spatial language be learned?
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Forbus, Kenneth D.. - : Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik, 2011. : Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings. 10131 - Spatial Representation and Reasoning in Language : Ontologies and Logics of Space, 2011
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How should depiction be represented and reasoned about?
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Forbus, Kenneth D.. - : Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2011. : Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings. 10131 - Spatial Representation and Reasoning in Language : Ontologies and Logics of Space, 2011
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Question Generation for Learning by Reading
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In: DTIC (2005)
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Sketching for Knowledge Capture: A Progress Report
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In: DTIC (2002)
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Qualitative Physics as a Component in Natural Language Semantics: A Progress Report
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In: DTIC (2002)
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Qualitative Spatial Interpretation of Course-of-Action Diagrams
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In: DTIC (2000)
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Abstract:
This paper demonstrates qualitative spatial reasoning techniques in a real-world diagrammatic reasoning task: Course-of-Action (COA) diagrams. COA diagrams are military planning diagrams that depict unit movements and tasks in a given region. COA diagrams are a useful test bed for researching diagram understanding due to their composable symbology, their intrinsically spatial task, and their use across many types of military planning. We constructed two COA diagram interpreters using our qualitative spatial reasoning engine, GeoRep. The first system uses GeoRep to interpret individual COA glyphs. The second system, building upon the first, takes preclassified symbol input and then uses GeoRep to describe geographic relationships implied by the symbol arrangements. This latter system, in a recent DARPA initiative, answered dozens of geographic queries about many different COA diagrams. This research shows that qualitative spatial reasoning, through tools like GeoRep, provides a useful substrate for complex diagrammatic reasoning. ; Presented at the International Workshop on Qualitative Reasoning (14th) held in Morelia, Mexico, in June 2000. Sponsored in part by ONR and by NSF.
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Keyword:
*COURSE-OF-ACTION; *DIAGRAMS; *MILITARY PLANNING; COMPUTER PROGRAMS; GEOGRAPHIC AREAS; INTERPRETERS; MEXICO; Military Operations; Printing and Graphic Arts; REASONING; SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION; SPATIAL REASONING ENGINE; Strategy and Tactics; SUBSTRATES; SYMBOLS; TEST BEDS; WORKSHOPS
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URL: http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA511030 http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA511030
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Analogy Just Looks Like High Level Perception: Why a Domain-General Approach to Analogical Mapping is Right
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In: DTIC (1998)
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Analogical Reasoning and Conceptual Change: A Case Study of Johannes Kepler
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In: DTIC (1997)
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Qualitative Spatial Reasoning: Framework and Frontiers
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In: DTIC (1994)
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